Astro2020 Science White Paper: The Local Relics of of Supermassive Black Hole Seeds
Abstract
We have compelling evidence for stellar-mass black holes (BHs) of ~5-80 Msun that form through the death of massive stars. We also have compelling evidence for so-called supermassive BHs (105-1010 Msun) that are predominantly found in the centers of galaxies. We have very good reason to believe there must be BHs with masses in the gap between these ranges: the first ~109 Msun BHs are observed only hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang, and all theoretically viable paths to making supermassive BHs require a stage of "intermediate" mass. However, no BHs have yet been reliably detected in the 100-105 Msun mass range. Uncovering these intermediate-mass BHs of 103-105 Msun is within reach in the coming decade. In this white paper we highlight the crucial role that 30-m class telescopes will play in dynamically detecting intermediate-mass black holes, should they exist.
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